Sheriff Laurie Smith is up against her former second-in-command, John Hirokawa, in the June primary. (Illustration by Kara Brown)

John Hirokawa remembers his phone started to ring late on the night of Aug. 26, 2015.

The then-Santa Clara County undersheriff and chief of correction was in Washington, D.C., moving his daughter back to college when he learned that an inmate at the county’s Main Jail was dead.

Michael Tyree, a 31-year-old bipolar inmate locked up on a minor drug charge, had been found lying face up with dozens of cuts on his body. While initial observations were inconclusive, an autopsy would point to blunt force trauma and massive internal bleeding as the causes of death. Other inmates gave accounts of a beating by three prison guards the night before.

“His spleen was almost sliced in half,” Stanford University professor and Santa Clara County forensic pathologist Joseph O’Hara later testified.

The ensuing scramble to respond within the sheriff’s office would set off a media firestorm, followed by an ongoing wave of jail reform activism that has spawned new watchdog groups, increased public spending on high-priced consultants and, most recently, helped fuel a string of inmate-led hunger strikes. The cumulative result has been Santa Clara County’s own version of a criminal justice reckoning playing out nationwide over issues including mass incarceration, the Black Lives Matter movement and the future of sanctuary cities.

The case of Tyree’s death has also emerged as a central point of contention in a June 5 sheriff’s race that pits Hirokawa against his boss at the time of the murder, five-term Santa Clara County Sheriff Laurie Smith. The ballot will also include three other candidates—current Deputy Joe La Jeunesse, teacher Martin J. Monica and retired sheriff’s Lt. Jose Salcido—complicating the path to the 50 percent majority required for the winning candidate to avoid a November runoff.

Hirokawa, who retired from the Sheriff’s Office in July 2016, believes that Smith has long been “asleep at the wheel.” He describes a long-term cultural rot within the department, where 1,800-odd employees lacked clear directions and “nothing gets accomplished,” even in a moment of crisis like after Tyree’s death.

“I was getting dozens of calls from command staff asking for direction,” Hirokawa recalls of the August night three years ago. “The sheriff’s in town, why aren’t you calling her?”

Smith’s response is simple: It was Hirokawa’s job, not hers, to oversee jails taken over by the Sheriff’s Office in 2010 during a wave of recession-era county budget cuts. Though he blames her for not steering the ship, she calls him equally capable of changing direction.

“Did he fully, absolutely, totally run the jail? Yes, he did,” Smith said of her second-in-command-turned-political opponent in an April 20 editorial board interview at the San Jose Inside/Metro Silicon Valley-owned Morgan Hill Times. “And he has taken full responsibility for the murders.”

An ABC7 news interview published in 2015 shows Hirokawa saying “yes,” and then continuing to speak in a muted video clip in response to a question about whether he accepts “personal responsibility” for Tyree’s death. In an April 24 interview, Hirokawa placed blame primarily on the three guards sentenced to 15 years to life in prison for the murder earlier this year, along with the entire Sheriff’s Department “leadership team,” including himself, Smith and other top brass.

Still, infighting about jail conditions is just one of several contentious issues converging ahead of the spring sheriff’s election. Also at hand in the most competitive contest in recent memory are countywide use of force policies and whether to cooperate with the anti-immigration priorities of President Donald Trump. This summer, the county is also expected to receive an updated proposal for a new $300 million jail financed by both the county and the state, in part to house long-term state prisoners reallocated to local jurisdictions after 2011’s AB 109 law to combat chronic overcrowding.

As of the most recent campaign disclosures filed in late April, Smith is handily outraising her opponents in the June contest. The incumbent reported more than $106,000 in monetary donations and $40,000 in loans, while Hirokawa posted $9,900 in cash and $75,000 in loans. Salcido reported $43,950 in total contributions, with well over half of that in loans or in-kind support.

In recent weeks, controversy has also resurfaced in the form of a 25-year-old allegation first reported by Metro (San Jose Inside’s parent publication) in 1998 that Smith interfered with an Internal Affairs investigation of a sexual harassment complaint filed against her by a male subordinate. During a 1992 conference, former sheriff’s Sgt. Gary Brady told the Mercury News in an April 1 story that Smith “made sexual advances toward him” in a parked, unmarked police car, despite the fact that both were married at the time. As San Jose Inside previously reported, Smith is accused of then pulling a cassette tape with evidence from the case file.

“I have not read the story, I will not read the story,” Smith told San Jose Inside after the Merc’s news report. “If I want to read trashy fiction, I'll pick something up at the airport."

In a race that has at times veered more into the realm of reality television than substantive debate about policing and prisons, outside observers like Jose Valle say that whoever becomes the next sheriff would be wise to pay closer attention to those directly impacted by county policy.

“You have to consider the experience of the prisoners inside,” said Valle, a community organizer focused on criminal justice for activist group Silicon Valley De-Bug. “That just saves us a lot more money than spending it on experts.”

A wave of reports and reform plans published by the county since Tyree’s death have resulted in a string of five- and six-figure agreements with consulting firms to study everything from health care and disability access inside county jails to much more fundamental issues. Case in point: who is actually managing day-to-day jail operations eight years after the Sheriff’s Office merged with the county Department of Correction.

“Once she’s built up her empire, she loses interest,” Hirokawa said of Smith’s leadership during that period. “They had to hire a consultant to figure out who’s running the jails.”

An “organizational structure review” by Sacramento firm CGL Cos. released in March concluded that, “In practice, the Sheriff’s Office manages all jail operations.” Still, the consultants added, governance and overall performance of the system are shared with the county Board of Supervisors.

“There really should be a more clear-cut chain of command,” Smith acknowledged in the interview with San Jose Inside’s sister publications in South County, noting that undersheriffs including Hirokawa have been tasked with taking on responsibilities previously delegated to the chief of correction. “If you ask employees, they don’t know who they work for, necessarily.”

Amid the leadership scuffle, Valle and fellow criminal justice activists are closely watching what he terms a wave of “inside activism” that has taken root inside jails over the last two years.

Some 200 inmates at both the county’s Main Jail and Elmwood facilities have participated in three hunger strikes organized since October 2016 by a group called Prisoners United of Silicon Valley. All three strikes, including an 11-day hunger strike just ended April 26, have resulted in changes to policies for inmates in solitary confinement, inmates designated with “protected custody status” and the amount of time inmates get outside their cells, Valle said.

“Once you become empowered to stand up for yourself … it expands people’s minds,” Valle said of the protest streak. “I think it’s become a part of the fabric in the jails.”

If so, that would mark a major change since a hunger strike last October, when Smith told San Jose Insidethat, “Some of them could stand to lose a little weight. We will give their fresh food to the Salvation Army again. There are hungry people who committed no crimes and deserve a dinner.”

John Hirokawa retired as undersheriff in 2016 and is now challenging his former boss in the June primary. (Photo by Greg Ramar)

The Reform

In the power struggle between Smith and Hirokawa, one shared challenge has been whether two candidates with long tenures inside an organization plagued by discord can really be expected to reform it.

“I’ve never been asleep at the wheel,” Smith said of Hirokawa’s most frequent campaign attack line. “I do more hours in that place than any other employee ever would.”

The tension most visibly came to a head in early April, when former Santa Clara County Judge LaDoris Cordell appeared with Hirokawa to demand Smith’s resignation in tandem with the release of a 66-page report that praised Smith’s leadership following the Tyree murder.

Cordell, who helmed a blue-ribbon reform commission convened in response to public outcry after the jailhouse death, called the $75,000 report authored by GAR Inc. Criminal Justice Consulting a “puff piece” that the Board of Supervisors should refuse to accept. She also advised the county to request repayment from Smith, who in turn expressed disappointment that county supervisors did not hear from the consultant who wrote the report, former Boise, Idaho, Sheriff Gary Raney.

Other reports have raised concerns about accountability within the sheriff’s office. The Deputy Sheriffs’ Association, which has endorsed Hirokawa, questioned a stark drop in jail employee firings. In 2014 and 2015, the report found that zero employees had been fired for misconduct, which the authors attributed to one of two factors.

“First is that the sheriff is doing so well in managing the jails that employees are not committing any fireable offenses. That is unlikely,” the report notes. “The other possibility is that there were limited or no investigations by the sheriff.”

Such criticism has led Hirokawa to try to distance himself from the administration he once helped run. In an interview in which he was asked about his role as chief of correction, he twice insisted that he was “chief of food services, warehouse, laundry and administrative booking.”

“That’s completely false,” says current Assistant Sheriff Carl Neusel. “Hirokawa ran those jails. Those were his meetings, every Wednesday. He ran them, no one else did. Trust me, food service, bookings and laundry were never discussed, but everything else was.”

“He would micromanage every decision. He ran the training. He sat in on the interviews to hire prospective deputy applicants,” Neusel says.

As to any ways he felt Smith limited his leadership ability, Hirokawa said he was directly barred from allowing former Chief of Correction Ed Flores to help the department run the county jails.

“I wanted him to attend our staff meetings and be part of our staff,” Hirokawa said. “Sheriff said ‘No, why are you going to invite him, John?’”

Hirokawa also blames Smith for dragging her feet on building a new jail, including a modernized booking system that he says would better process inmates like Tyree with special circumstances.

“You have behavioral health issues, and what then happens?” Hirokawa said. “You have use of force.”

With a revised jail plan expected this summer, a March report to the Board of Supervisors indicated that major design changes could result in “a delayed opening date and additional construction costs of approximately $1 million per month.” Also up for debate is whether county deputies should be allowed to use Tasers on inmates, which Smith supports and Hirokawa opposes.

In the meantime, as Santa Clara County continues to add new jobs and residents, the question is how bitter infighting between the region’s top cops might manifest in an area already experiencing intense social growing pains.

19 Comments

> when Smith told San Jose Inside that, “Some of them could stand to lose a little weight. We will give their fresh food to the Salvation Army again. There are hungry people who committed no crimes and deserve a dinner.”

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has jurisdiction to investigate use of excessive force, public corruption, civil rights abuses, murders, conspiracy to obstruct justice.
Santa Clara County Courts and jails are mismanaged. Fraud and waste is evident.
Qui Tam it. Drain the swamp. Make Santa Clara County accountable and then lead
by example. Rent-to-own judges are in business to protect their clients.

Smith always throws someone under the bus when she’s at fault. She wasn’t blaming Hirokawa when this inmate was killed, or when there were all kinds of problems in the jails, and she can’t blame him for all the problems that have gone on since he left either. She only started finger pointing at Hirokawa when he decided to run against her. Look at her history, and how she attacked Judge Cordell in the media when Cordell refused to play ball and help her get re-elected.

Another recent article accuses Smith of holding off an arrest on a child molester to make her look good in her bid for a 6th term, in the media release of this pukes arrest. The poor investigator who came forward and put his job on the line is being investigated but SMITH isn’t! WHY?

Also, the BOS share a lot of blame in this whole jails mess. They ignore the problems unearthed by the Blue Ribbon Commission, and 4 of them even endorse her!

Why aren’t the BOS asking Smith to resign over the sexual harassment claim, and her interfering with an investigation? According SJI and other medias, Smith took evidence that she had no right to.

The Santa Clara City Attorney is already looking into kicking Caserta off the City Council.
Or is there only merit to sexual harassment claims when it happens to a woman?

I still want you know why the supervisors and media have continued to ignore the allegations over interfering with the medical examiner’s investigations and the subsequent, very quiet removal of her from the oversight role.

The level of cherry picking Laurie Smith’s offenses by the media continues to amaze me. Any other law enforcement leader, liberal or conservative, likely would have been run out on a rail. Here they seem to worship such corruption a la Joe Arpaio. The liberal side of the same dirty coin.

Laurie Smith is terrible in a crisis. The shooting at the Hansen Permanente Quarry in 2011 is a perfect example. As the Sheriff and her command staff arrived near the scene they set up their Command Post at the County Fire Station on Stevens Creek Blvd, a location well removed from the actual scene but along the only escape route for the suspect(s) leaving the quarry but we will ignore the poor decision as to location. More importantly, as related to me by firefighters, not Sheriff’s personnel, Smith was screaming at her command staff. It is a perfect way to remain calm and to lead you subordinates. She also asked the oncoming Battalion Chief to draw up an Incident Command structure. As a thankfully retired sergeant of that Sheriff’s Department I can assure readers that all sergeants and higher have been trained in ICS (Incident Command Structure) and should be able to implement it without asking our fellow first responders to do it. Should you need a quick update it is available through a simple Google search. Screaming at your staff and the inability to follow accepted norms in policing is pathetic, but typical of Laurie Smith’s lack of leadership skills.

Having that in mind, voters should move to retire Smith to the lovely garden in which she is standing in the accompanying photo. This reader has to assume the flowers are natural, unlike this overly photoshopped picture of Smith.

“I can assure readers that all sergeants and higher have been trained in ICS (Incident Command Structure) and should be able to implement it without asking our fellow first responders to do it.”

A) Barely trained in many cases.
B) Now you also understand, sergeants are lowly nobodies and she would never allow a sergeant to run an incident command unless said sergeant was well under her heel and would allow her to take all the credit. Most of those people can barely write a report, never mind run IC.
C) You would think that if sgts are trained in ICS, that would logically mean LTs and Captains are also trained. Wanna hear about the Sierra La Mar ICS cluster? Or the ICS at any of the OIS incidents in the last 5 years? It’s like none of them know their jobs. In one instance I was told that there was a captain so incomprehensibly incompetent at one scene that he was turned into an errant just to give him something he knew how to do.

If this outlet was properly reporting on this election, then they would find that there have been consultant reports that state that THE SHERIFF is the one in charge of officers in the jails – have you even done your research?? Not to mention that it is more than unsettling that the majority of the good people protecting our communities have no confidence in the CURRENT leadership of the Sheriff’s Office. You’ll also find that Smith’s inconsistent and conflicting answers that she provided to different media outlets make it totally obvious that she is 1) lying through her teeth 2) incompetent about the issues facing the Sheriff’s Office.

The endorsements over 2 elections now for her opponent by the DSA, and the still standing vote of no confidence are probably this first clue that those protecting your community have no confidence in Smith. The fact she’s less worried about resolving serious DSA safety issues on the table than she is about making sure CPOA board members can represent themselves a fully sworn members of law enforcement when they’re not, is probably another cookie that their lack of confidence isn’t fake news.

I guess to know all this though one would have to actually pay attention to real news and not the spoon feed pablum offered by the sheriff.

At the end of a thoughtful and well-written article, with a series of impassioned comments from readers, I was impressed with civic engagement on this issue. And then I read the comment on the toes. Oh my goodness!!!!!! That’s some scary stuff there.